Hii inatokea Kenya tu

Waandishi wa Habari wanavichwa vya Maboga
 
If you look carefully at each newspaper, just below the large print of Daily Nation to the left there are a series of stars. Those stars correspond to the region that the distributor takes the paper. e. g Nrb/central is one star, coast is six stars, western is four stars etc etc. Those regions have differing news tastes hence the differing headlines.
Would low maize prices make headlines in Mombasa?? I think not, but something to do with joho or an attack by a popo bawa would. A headline with raila sells anywhere in kenya, as my reliable friends in print media tell me. And there is nothing new in selling an afternoon and evening edition,or regional ones. E. g In the USA, if you sell a major paper with national outreach like NY Times or USA Today in the South, throw in some race based headlines and you are sure to sell chap chap.

Besides, news is a perishable commodity like fruits and veggies that most people prefer fresh. Would you prefer freshly made tea at 4 pm to the one made at 7am? Or would you prefer a fresh fruit to a canned one? The answer is obvious. It's called moving forward and always innovating to remain fresh and relevant in the news industry and i can assure most readers here you would have to go to south Africa to get a comparable, vibrant and exciting press that churns out news every 24 hrs.

Mungu ibariki Kenya, mungu ibariki Africa yote.
 
we jamaaaa wewe safi, unasema ukweli kiasi flani.pia unachekesha sana kwenye hii taluma ya komedi mkopoa sana
 
Welcome to the world hapa kuna evening editions pia. Anyway there is nothing unethical here. It's the same way Toyota doesn't make Premio for say European markets
 
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